Good journalism costs money Upgrade to paid
A movie-themed celebration to mark the tenth anniversary of independent cinema Studio 74 while welcoming in 2026.
Leigh Curtis
Exeter Phoenix is holding a cinematic New Year’s Eve party with live music, themed bars and DJs on Wednesday 31 December.
The party will take a trip to the movies to mark the tenth anniversary of Exeter Phoenix’s independent cinema Studio 74.
There will be film-themed rooms throughout the building including a Jurassic terrace and a Lost in Translation karaoke bar.
Drinks will be available from a Bollywood-themed bar and the Casablanca-inspired Rick’s.
The Exeter Phoenix house band will play music from film soundtracks from every era.
The Exeter Phoenix New Year’s Eve party takes place from 8pm on Wednesday 31 December 2025 to 2am on New Year’s Day.
Tickets cost £28 in advance, plus booking fee, or £32 on the door.
For more information and to book tickets visit the Exeter Phoenix website.
The only way to cover the cost of producing and publishing Exeter Observer’s independent public interest journalism is by readers helping to pay for it.
Each of our paying subscribers keeps us up and running for one day each year by chipping in less than £2/week.
Our members contribute more towards our running costs and get more in return.
152 of the 300 paying subscribers we need to break even and keep publishing have signed up so far.
If you think Exeter needs the kind of journalism we provide then please join them today and get access to exclusive premium content and more.
Exeter City Council is about to seize the helm of Exe estuary maritime life: will it steer it onto the rocks?
Charges for waterways access are set to be imposed from the quay and canal basin to the coast under proposed Harbour Revision Order powers after six years of rising costs propelled by pursuit of Port Marine Safety Code compliance. They risk driving away craft of all sizes, from kayaks to yachts, while redevelopment threatens canalside land – but it’s not too late to change course.
, updated
Devon County Council funding cuts set to reduce core library opening hours by 30%
Public consultation on changes explores possibility of closing some branches altogether despite claims to the contrary while Libraries Unlimited contract extension decision scheduled for six weeks before consultation ends.
Exeter City Council adds 813 more student and “co-living” beds to city “housing” supply with Heavitree Road approval
Complex of seven blocks up to six storeys tall on site of police station and magistrates court to bring purpose-built temporary accommodation tally to 3,250 beds in Newtown alone – while failing to meet local plan minimum building separation policy.
Exeter College and Petroc merger to go ahead in January
Further and higher education colleges with Barnstaple, Tiverton and several Exeter sites will become Exeter and North Devon Colleges Group after year-long process including public consultation showing two-thirds in support.
Exeter City Council approves 54 more dwellings in Topsham gap on former golf driving range
Greenfield development follows council approval of plans enabling driving range relocation to privately-owned land in Ludwell Valley Park.
St Petrock’s launches fundraising appeal as number of people sleeping rough in Exeter continues to rise
Campaign film underscores dedicated homelessness charity mission as demand for its support services grows.
McCarthy Stone amends Heavitree school playing field retirement complex plans to trigger second public consultation
Developer makes minor adjustments to proposals for 36 retirement flats which have prompted concerns about loss of green space and adverse impact on historic character of conservation area.








